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Zusatztext "They're back! The relentless creative output of the post-Jungian critique of film rolls on and you can't ignore them. In this! their second volume of movie analyses! these writers - some academics! some clinicians! some both - have returned in strength. While many psychoanalytic approaches to the moving image are starting to feel a little... what shall we say?... tired! the Jung-dude abides! And judging by the take-up of the first Jung and Film by Media and Film departments! clinical trainings and industry creatives alike! the out of date resistance to all things Jungian has witnessed a fast dissolve. These chapters are erudite! funny! sexy! sometimes a little weird. They offer tight close-ups and wide shots. They tell you about the psychology of film and the psychology of those who make film. Like with Coppola's The Godfather - this sequel could be even better than what went before." - Andrew Samuels! University of Essex! UK Informationen zum Autor Christopher Hauke, Luke Hockley Zusammenfassung This book tackles the broader issues of film production and consumption, the audience and the place of film culture in our lives. Inhaltsverzeichnis List of Films. Hauke, Hockley , Introduction. Part I: Image and Psychotherapy . Klenck , Hurwitz , The Decisive Image in Documentary Film, in Jungian Analysis. Hewison , "I Thought He Might Be Better Now": A Clinician’s Reading of Individuation in Breaking The Waves . Zanardo , Love, Loss, Imagination and The Other in Soderbergh’s Solaris . Izod, Dovalis , Birth : Eternal Grieving of the Spotless Mind. Hauke , Soul and Space in No Country for Old Men . Part II: Image and Theory . Fredericksen , Jungian Film Studies: The Corruption of Consciousness and the Nurturing of Psychological Life. Hauke , "Much Begins Amusingly and Leads into the Dark": Jung’s Popular Cinema and the Other. Jacobs , Contrasting Interpretations of Film: Freudian and Jungian. Izod , Individual Interpretations: A Response to Michael Jacobs. Hockley , The Third Image: Depth Psychology and the Cinematic Experience. Rowland , The Nature of Adaptation: Myth and the Feminine Gaze in Ang Lee’s Sense and Sensibility . Singh , Cinephilia: Or, Looking for Meaningfulness in Encounters with Cinema. Miller , Twilight : Discourse Theory and Jung. Bassil-Morozow , Individual and Society in the Films of Tim Burton. Part III: Image, Type and Archetype . Dougherty , The Shadow: Constriction, Transformation and Individuation in Campion’s The Piano . Lennihan , The Dark Feminine in Aronofsky’s The Wrestler . Paganopoulos , The Archetype of Transformation in Maya Derren’s Film Rituals. Palmer , Coppola’s The Conversation : Typology and a Caul to the Soul. Waddell , Navel Gazing: Introversion/Extraversion and Australian Cinema. Beebe , The Wizard of Oz : A Vision of Development in the American Political Psyche. ...